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{UAH} THE REAL NUMBERS OF OBAMA'S FAILURE THAT OCEN NEKYON FEARS TO MAKE PUBLIC {Number three}

Official “Labor Market Conditions” Give off First Warning Signs

by Wolf Richter • May 9, 2016

Jobs metrics were immune to worsening economic malaise.

 

The official labor market metrics in the US — unemployment rate, number of jobs created, weekly unemployment insurance claims, etc. — have been immune to the worsening malaise visible elsewhere:

And throughout, the official employment metrics did not reflect these trends.

Now, however, the first squiggles are showing up in the numbers. So today’s Labor Market Conditions Index (LMCI) is particularly important — because it shows those squiggles.

We already got a foretaste last week when unemployment claims surged by the most in over a year, and the nonfarm jobs number, the worst since January 2014, was a doozie of a disappointment for many analysts.

Doug Short at Advisor Perspectives, lays out the LMCI below in his excellent and cogent manner. Note, this is just among the first squiggles in a series that could get ugly in a recession, as the charts show. Doug Short:

The Labor Market Conditions Index (LMCI) is a relatively recent indicator developed by Federal Reserve economists to assess changes in the labor market conditions. It is a dynamic factor model of labor market indicators, essentially a diffusion index subject to extensive revisions based on nineteen underlying indicators in nine broad categories (see the table at the bottom for details).

Today’s release of the April data came in at -0.9, up from a revised -2.1 in March. Selective downward revisions were made as far back as September 2011. Investing.com had forecast -1.0.

The indicator, designed to illustrate expansion and contraction of labor market conditions, was initially announced in May 2014, but the data series was constructed back to August 1976. Here is a linear view of the complete LMCI. We’ve highlighted recessions with callouts for its value the month recessions begin and for the latest index value.

As we readily see, with the exception of the second half of the double-dip recession in the early 1980, sustained contractions in this indicator is a rather long leading indicator for recessions. It is more useful as a general gauge of employment health.

Note that in the most recent FOMC minutes for January 26-27, the phrase “labor market conditions” was used nine times. Maximum employment, after all, is one of the Fed’s twin mandates.

Interestingly enough, the FEDS Notes article announcing the indicator doesn’t chart the complete series with monthly granularity. Instead, the authors use a column chart to show blocks of six-month averages for the two halves of each calendar year since 1977. This approach further supports the use of the indicator as a general gauge of health. Here is our larger version of the same graphic model.

We couldn’t resist the urge to create a chart of the more conventional six-month moving average of the indicator. Note that we’ve adjusted the vertical axis to capture the depth of the contraction during the last recession.

As all three charts above illustrate, labor market conditions have been weakening. The LMCI hit its interim high in April 2014 and its six-month moving-average high four months later in August of that year.

Below is a table identifying the nine categories and 19 underlying indicators in the LMCI.

A Footnote on Revisions

The FRED repository notes for this indicator has a lengthy explanation for the high incidence of revisions for this index. Here is an excerpt.

Users of the LMCI should take note that the entire history of the LMCI may revise each month. Three sources contribute to such revisions.

The first source is new data that were not available at the time of the employment report….

The second source of revision comes from revisions to existing data….

The third source of revision is inherent to the model. The LMCI is derived from the Kalman smoother, meaning that the estimate of the index in any particular month is the model’s best assessment given all past and future observations.

By Doug Short at Advisor Perspectives.

And this is how the credit cycle begins to unravel. Read…  US Commercial Bankruptcies Skyrocket

 

EM

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